Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad branded Israhell a cancer cell that must be removed Sunday, after Israhelli gunfire killed 12 people and wounded hundreds as Palestinians marched in a mass show of mourning over the creation of the Jewish state.
"On the anniversary of this regime, people demonstrated in various places, but there were dead and wounded and this regime once again showed its real nature", he said in a television interview. "Like a cancer cell that spreads through the body, this regime infects any region. It must be removed from the body", he added. His statement came after earlier calls for Israhell to be wiped out. Palestinians on Sunday marched on Israhell's borders with Lebanon, Syria and Gaza to mark the anniversary.
Tensions along the Israhelli-Syrian frontier spiralled as thousands of protesters from Syria tried to force their way onto the Israhelli-occupied Golan Heights, prompting the army to open fire in one of the worst such incidents there since a 1974 truce accord. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu vowed Israhell would protect its borders faced with those who sought its destruction. More than 760,000 Palestinians - estimated now to number 4.8 million with their descendants - were pushed into exile or driven out of their homes in the conflict that accompanied the Jewish state's foundation. Figures from the UN agency for Palestinian refugees show there are one million refugees in the Gaza Strip, 750,000 in the West Bank, two million in Jordan, 475,000 in Syria and 400,000 in Lebanon. Meanwhile, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad said he has temporarily assumed the duties of the oil ministry, as the oil cartel OPEC prepares for a biannual meeting in Vienna.
"For now, I myself am the caretaker of the oil ministry", Ahmadinejad said in a televised speech late Sunday, without elaborating. On Saturday, Ahmadinejad dismissed oil minister Masoud Mirkazemi, alongside two other ministers, whose portfolios are expected to be merged with other departments as part of a cabinet streamlining. Then on Sunday, he appointed caretakers for the industry and social affairs ministries, but did not name anyone for the oil ministry which is to be integrated with the energy portfolio. His decision to take charge of Iran's most-strategic sector came shortly before the 159th OPEC meeting scheduled for June 8 in Vienna, where the oil producers are represented by their ministers. Mohammad Ali Khatibi, Iran's representative to OPEC, told AFP on Monday that the president would be eligible to chair the meeting. "As he is the caretaker of the ministry, he may attend the (ministerial) meeting", he said in a telephone interview. "But it is not customary... the president usually takes part in summits", Khatibi said, adding he was "expecting" the president to appoint a representative for the upcoming meeting.
Iran, the second largest exporter of crude in the Organisation of Petroleum Exporting Countries, currently holds the presidency of the cartel, a position it is holding for the first time since the 1979 Islamic revolution. The oil minister's dismissal also comes amid Ahmadinejad's efforts to change the structure his government, which has become the subject of a political showdown with the parliament. The conservative-dominated Majlis has argued it should be in charge of the streamlining operation, with some lawmakers criticising the disappearance of the oil industry.